You may remember the incident that Google had on January 31, when it during 55 minutes accidentally flagged all URL:s containing “/” as a potential malware site. This meant that every single site on the Internet was marked as harmful, including Google.com.
Everyone who actually clicked on a link was met with an information page that the site could contain malware, referring people to visit StopBadware.org for more information (Google has a collaboration with this site).
Unexpected side effect
This incident effectively created a DDoS attack on the StopBadware.org website as a good part of the people accessing Google Search tried visiting this page. Needless to say, the site got so much traffic that it crashed.
StopBadware.org traffic
It seems like the StopBadware.org site continued to receive a lot of extra traffic for a couple of days afterwards when the news about the incident spread around the Web. Here is a very telling traffic graph from Alexa:
There are odd ways you can get a boost in traffic, but this definitely has to rank as one of the strangest we’ve seen…
Searches for “malware”
Another interesting side effect of Google’s malware warning incident was that there were about 5 times as many searches for the term “malware” on the day of the incident, probably as people were trying to figure out what it is and why Google was warning them about it.
Conclusion
Google is such a giant on the Internet that any changes to its homepage will affect the behavior of a huge group of Web users (augmented, perhaps, by the tendency of bloggers and journalists to cover everything Google), and this was an excellent example.